(He Gets Us, Twitter / @JuddLegrum)

It seems that every Super Bowl there's a surprising product that buys a huge chunk of ad space despite being relatively unknown to the general public. Last year, that product was cryptocurrency. This year, it's Jesus Christ.

The group "He Gets Us" bought two ads that seemed to be advertising nothing except Jesus. The first ad showed a bunch of kids doing nice things, like helping each other pee in a urinal, saying, "Jesus didn't want us to act like adults." The second showed pictures of violent protests and riots while encouraging people to be kind to each other.

The ads naturally raised a lot of questions among baffled viewers. Why were they seeing ads for Jesus alongside self-referential beer commercials and the culmination of an exhausting campaign for M&Ms? Who purchased these ads, and for what purpose?

The "He Gets Us" ads have actually been running on various channels and social media platforms for some time (such as Reddit for several months now), but last night they reached their widest audience yet. This prompted some investigative journalism into this advertisement that just spent quite a bit of money on commercials for Christ.

The New York Times reported that the "He Gets Us" campaign is run by the nonprofit Servant Foundation, which "also does business as an organization called the Signatry." Among those donating to the cause is David Green, the founder of Hobby Lobby.

This set off some alarm bells for readers, as Hobby Lobby has found itself in myriad controversies related to some hot-button issues in the past, such as arguing it shouldn't cover women's contraceptive products in its employees' health care plans on the basis of religious freedom. Sure enough, as people dug into the "He Gets Us" ads, they discovered that Sigantry has been lobbying against LGBTQ+ and abortion issues.

Jacobin reported that "the Servant Foundation donated more than $50 million to the Alliance Defending Freedom — a nonprofit that’s led big policy fights over abortion and nondiscrimination laws at the Supreme Court and in states around the country," adding, "The nonprofit is designated as an anti-LGBTQ+ hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center."

As the business dealings of the Servant Foundation became more generally known, many began feeling that the wholesome, equality-promoting ads the organization ran during the Super Bowl rang hollow.

The Jesus adverts ran alongside other controversial ads last night, including an ad for the Church of Scientology, ads for Fox News TV host Greg Gutfield, and a bizarre ad for a game called DigiDaigaku that some felt looked more like a phishing scam than a real advertisement.


Share Pin


Comments 6 total

ObadiahtheSlim

GASP A Christian group against abortion as a birth control! Say it isn't so!

0

DirkDiggums

"He gets us", with a link to a website called love your enemies, yet the same group is funding errors to oppress LGBT. If you truly love you enemies, you should around saying "Forgive them father, for they know not what they do". Jesus lifted not one hand to his oppressors, with the sole exception of flipping the MONEY CHANGERS at the temple because he considered profiting from religion abhorrent. This ultra expensive ad just to get a few eyes on this fake "nice Christanity" would probably be something Jesus would be denounce. I mean tax free megachurches and pastors with private jets is the polar opposite of the teachings. Some people in general are just really stupid and don't notice the wolves in sheep's clothing, that pay loudly to be seen, that Jesus warned about.

10

Blue2

Soooo… how long when the conservatives get outraged for using children as political objects in this campaign, like they did with Greta Thunberg? Surely they are extremely principled when it comes to children's innocence and keeping them away from any political discourse, right?… Right?

1
pinterest